Tag: Methods

Forgive me for quoting Seth Godin once again, but he tends to get me thinking. He says…

If we define quality as regularly meeting the measured specifications for an item, then quality matters a lot for something like a pacemaker. It doesn’t matter at all for a $3,000 haute couture dress.

More fashion = less need for quality.

Don’t misunderstand, Seth is not saying that the more fashionable something is, the lower its quality. He is simply saying, the more fashionable something is, the less it needs to be of a high quality. People don’t care if it is the best quality if it is the most fashionable, the most popular, and the most likely to get them noticed.

This should cause us to beware lest we make the Gospel more about fashion and less about quality.

We tend to talk a lot about the Gospel in terms of popularity (fashion). How does it relate to culture? How do we get people to be interested? Will they like it better if we do church this way? But do we risk lowering the quality when we try to make the Gospel more fashionable?

We need to see the Gospel as relating more closely to a pacemaker. Fashion is not that crucial. The important thing is, “will it save my life?” We are not peddling fashion; competing with the fashionista down the street. We are spreading the news about a life-saving Gospel!

With that being said, the ideal situation is when something is considered fashionable because of it’s quality. A truly life-changing Gospel has a good chance of becoming the most talked about thing this year!

Methods!

What is a method? What methods for evangelism/revival work? Which ones don’t work? What methods did the early church use? What methods were used during the revivals in the early 1900’s? Would those methods still work? Did they really even have methods? Is that a method, or an excuse to neglect Truth?

This is a short list of the “methods” questions being talked about in coffee shops, debated on twitter, and written about in numerous articles. It is a question I have wrestled with personally. In fact, I have wrestled with the question of “am I wrestling too much with the question of methods?”

I am not here to proclaim that we should shut down every conversation about methods, not by any means. But before we spend too much time on methods, we better make sure that we are giving the proper time and effort to the foundational methods; there are some methods which have always been, and will always be, a part of every revival and outpouring of God’s Spirit and Truth.

From the birth of the Church until this present day and every day following, prayer has always been the foundation and precursor to an outpouring of God’s Spirit and a revelation of Truth.

Leonard Ravenhill put it like this, “The Church began with these men in the ‘upper room’ agonizing – and today it is ending with men in the supper room organizing. The Church began in revival; we are ending in ritual.”

What we need before we focus on any other method is men and women that will give themselves to agonizing, soul-stirring, hell-fighting, door-opening intercessory prayer for a lost and dying world. Hopefully we spend as much time in prayer as we spend debating, discussing, organizing, and implementing other methods.

If we will give ourselves to prayer first, I believe four things will happen.

1. We will learn to rely on God rather than any method. Prayer and fasting (and similar disciplines) are the only universal methods that will work in all places at all times.

2. God will give us wisdom to utilize methods that will work in our culture in our time. Obviously these could look incredibly different from city to city, state to state, and especially country to country.

3. All honestly employed, Biblically aligned methods will garner results. I have to believe that if we will prayerfully do our part, that God will honor that by “drawing all men.”

4. We will easily discern the difference between a method and a neglecting of Truth. Leading with prayer will not lead us to leave Truth.

Allow me to express my opinion this way. I write. But most of the time I stew. I convince myself that I’m doing something important, but really I’m just stewing. There comes a point when even the good work of preparation, study, source gathering, organizing, and outlining begins to impede the actual work of writing. Almost every time I write, I reach a point at which I must convince myself to stop the busy and start the real work.

Isn’t that kind of where we are? I agree that methods are important and I am not against discussing what will work. But it won’t matter if I am not doing the actual work (and maybe work isn’t a good term, but I think you understand).

Please, pray for lost souls. Pray for revival. Pray for an outpouring of God’s Spirit. Pray for Truth to be revealed to the hearts of men.

Pray. And then pray some more. Maybe God will reveal the method that you need to use in your city while you are praying?